The development of the city was consolidated in the 12th century underRoger de Clinton, who fortified theCathedral Close and also laid out the town with the ladder-shaped street pattern that survives to this day. Lichfield's heyday was in the 18th century, when it developed into a thriving coaching city. This was a period of great intellectual activity; the city was the home of many famous people including Samuel Johnson,David Garrick,Erasmus Darwin andAnna Seward, prompting Johnson's remark that Lichfield was "a city of philosophers".
Today, the city still retains its old importance as an ecclesiastical centre, and its industrial and commercial development has been limited. The centre of the city has over 230listed buildings (including many examples ofGeorgian architecture) and preserves much of its historic character.
The origin of the modern name "Lichfield" is twofold. AtWall, 3.5 km (2.2 mi) south of the current city, there was aRomano-British village,Letocetum, aCommon Brittonic place-name meaning "Grey wood", "grey" perhaps referring to varieties of tree prominent in the landscape, such asash andelm.[4][5][6]: 335 In the post-Roman period,Letocetum developed into Old WelshLuitcoyt.[7]
The earliest record of the name in English is theVita Sancti Wilfredi of around 715, describing whenChad moves from York to Lichfield in 669. "Chad was made Bishop of the Mercians immediately after his deposition; Wilfred gave him the place (locus) at Lichfield (Onlicitfelda)".[8] The prefix "on" indicates that the place given to Chad by Wilfrid was "in Lichfield", indicating the name was understood to apply to a region rather than a specific settlement.[9][10] Bede'sEcclesiastical History of the English People, completed in 731, states that Chad acquiredLicidfelth as his episcopal seat (sedem episcopalem).[11]
These and later sources show that the nameLetocetum had passed intoOld English asLicid,[12] to which was appended the Old English wordfeld ("open country"). This wordLyccidfeld is the origin of the word "Lichfield".[12][11]
The modern day city of Lichfield and the Roman villa of Letocetum are just two miles (3 km) apart. While these names are distinct in modern usage, they had a common derivation in the Brittonic original *Letocaiton, indicating that "grey wood" referred to the region inclusive of modern-day Lichfield City and the Roman villa.[8]
Popular etymology has it that a thousand Christians were martyred in Lichfield around AD 300 during the reign ofDiocletian and that the name Lichfield actually means "field of the dead" (seelich). There is no evidence to support this legend.[13]
The earliest evidence of settlement isMesolithic flints discovered on the high ground of the cemetery atSt Michael on Greenhill, which may indicate an early flint industry. Traces ofNeolithic settlement have been discovered on the south side of the sandstone ridge occupied byLichfield Cathedral.[14]
2.2 mi (3.5 km) south-west of Lichfield, near the point whereIcknield Street crossesWatling Street, was the site of Letocetum (theBrittonic *Lētocaiton, "Greywood"). Established in AD 50 as aRoman military fortress, it had become a civilian settlement (vicus) with a bath house and amansio by the 2nd century.[14] Letocetum fell into decline by the 4th century and the Romans had left by the 5th century. There have been scattered Romano-British finds in Lichfield and it is possible that a burial discovered beneath the cathedral in 1751 was Romano-British.[14] There is no evidence of what happened to Letocetum after the Romans left; however, Lichfield may have emerged as the inhabitants of Letocetum relocated during its decline. ACair Luit Coyd ("Fort Greywood") was listed byNennius among the 28 cities ofBritain in hisHistoria Brittonum,[15] although these were largely historic remembrances of earlySub-Roman Britain.
The three-spiredLichfield Cathedral was built between 1195 and 1249St Michael's Churchyard 1840
The early history of Lichfield is obscure. The first authentic record of Lichfield occurs inBede's history, where it is calledLicidfelth and mentioned as the place whereSt Chad fixed theepiscopal see of the Mercians in 669. The firstChristian king ofMercia,Wulfhere, donated land at Lichfield for Chad to build a monastery. It was because of this that the ecclesiastical centre of Mercia became settled as theDiocese of Lichfield, which was approximately 7 miles (11 km) northwest of the seat of the Mercian kings atTamworth.
In July 2009, theStaffordshire Hoard, the largest collection ofAnglo-Saxon gold ever found, was discovered in a field in the parish ofHammerwich, 4 mi (6.4 km) south-west of Lichfield; it was probably deposited in the 7th century.
The first cathedral was built on the present site in 700 when BishopHædde built a new church to house the bones of St Chad, which had become the centre of a sacred shrine to many pilgrims when he died in 672. The burial in the cathedral of the kings of Mercia, Wulfhere in 674 andCeolred in 716, further increased the city's prestige.[16] In 786 KingOffa made the city an archbishopric with authority over all the bishops from theHumber to theRiver Thames; his appointee was ArchbishopHygeberht. This may have been motivated by Offa's desire to have an archbishop consecrate his sonEcgfrith as king, since it is possibleJænberht refused to perform the ceremony, which took place in 787. After King Offa's death in 796, Lichfield's power waned; in 803 the primacy was restored to Canterbury byPope Leo III after only 16 years.
TheHistoria Brittonum lists the city as one of the 28 cities of Britain around AD 833.
During the 9th century, Mercia was devastated by DanishVikings. Lichfield itself was unwalled and the cathedral was despoiled, soBishop Peter moved the see to the fortified and wealthierChester in 1075. At the time of theDomesday Book survey (1086), Lichfield was held by thebishop of Chester; Lichfield was listed as a small village. The lord of the manor was the Bishop of Chester until the reign ofEdward VI.
In 1102 Bishop Peter's successor,Robert de Limesey, transferred the see from Chester to Coventry. The Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield had seats in both locations; work on the present Gothic cathedral at Lichfield began in 1195. (In 1837 the see of Lichfield acquired independent status, and the style 'Bishop of Lichfield' was adopted.)
In 1153 a markets charter was granted by King Stephen and, ever since, weekly markets have been held in the Market Square.[17]
Lichfield Cathedral in modern times.
BishopRoger de Clinton was responsible for transforming the scattered settlements to the south of Minster Pool into the ladder-plan streets existing today. Market Street, Wade Street, Bore Street and Frog Lane linked Dam Street, Conduit Street and Bakers Lane on one side with Bird Street and St John Street on the other. Bishop de Clinton also fortified the cathedral close and enclosed the town with a bank and ditch, and gates were set up where roads into the town crossed the ditch.[16] In 1291 Lichfield was severely damaged by a fire which destroyed most of the town; however the Cathedral and Close survived unscathed.[18]
In 1387Richard II gave a charter for the foundation of the guild of St Mary and St John the Baptist; this guild functioned as the local government, until its dissolution byEdward VI, who incorporated the town in 1548.
The policies ofHenry VIII had a dramatic effect on Lichfield. TheReformation brought the disappearance ofpilgrim traffic following the destruction of St Chad's shrine in 1538, which was a major loss to the city's economic prosperity. That year too theFranciscan Friary was dissolved, the site becoming a private estate. Further economic decline followed the outbreak ofplague in 1593, which resulted in the death of over a third of the entire population.[19]
Three people were burned at the stake forheresy under Mary I. The last public burning at the stake for heresy in England took place in Lichfield, whenEdward Wightman fromBurton upon Trent wasexecuted by burning in the Market Place on 11 April 1612 for promoting himself as the divineParaclete and Saviour of the world.[20][21]
Samuel Johnson was born in Breadmarket Street in 1709Statue of Dr Johnson in Lichfield's Market Square "The Doctor's statue, which is of some inexpensive composite painted a shiny brown, and of no great merit of design, fills out the vacant dulness of the little square in much the same way as his massive personality occupies—with just a margin forGarrick—the record of his native town."—Henry James,Lichfield and Warwick, 1872Photograph byRichard Cockle Lucas (sculptor) of Johnson statue taken in 1859
In theEnglish Civil War, Lichfield was divided. The cathedral authorities, supported by some of the townsfolk, were for the king, but the townsfolk generally sided with the Parliament. This led to the fortification of the close in 1643. Lichfield's position as a focus of supply routes had an important strategic significance during the war, and both forces were anxious for control of the city. The Parliamentary commanderLord Brooke led an assault on the fortified close, but was killed by a sniper's bullet on St Chad's day in 1643.[22] The close subsequently yielded to the Parliamentarians, but wasretaken byPrince Rupert of the Rhine in the same year, and the governorship granted to a local gentleman, Richard Bagot. On the collapse of the Royalist cause in 1646 it again surrendered. The cathedral suffered extensive damage from the war, including the complete destruction of the central spire. It was restored at the Restoration under the supervision ofBishop Hacket, and thanks in part to the generosity ofKing Charles II.
Lichfield started to develop a lively coaching trade as a stop-off on the busy route between London andChester from the 1650s onwards, making it Staffordshire's most prosperous town. In the 18th century, and then reaching its peak in the period from 1800 to 1840, the city thrived as a busy coaching city on the main routes from London to the north-west and Birmingham to the north-east. It also became a centre of great intellectual activity, being the home of many famous people includingSamuel Johnson,David Garrick,Erasmus Darwin andAnna Seward; this prompted Johnson's remark that Lichfield was "a city of philosophers". In the 1720sDaniel Defoe described Lichfield as 'a fine, neat, well-built, and indifferent large city', the principal town in the region after Chester.[23] During the late 18th and early 19th century much of the medieval city was rebuilt with the red-brickGeorgian style buildings still to be seen today. Also during this time, the city's infrastructure underwent great improvements, with underground sewerage systems, paved streets and gas-powered street lighting.[24] An infantry regiment of theBritish Army was formed at Lichfield in 1705 by Col.Luke Lillingstone in the King's Head tavern in Bird Street. In 1751 it became the 38th Regiment of Foot, and in 1783 the 1stStaffordshire Regiment; after reorganisation in 1881 it became the 1st battalion of theSouth Staffordshire Regiment.[23]
The arrival of theIndustrial Revolution and the railways in 1837 signalled the end of Lichfield's position as an important staging post for coaching traffic. While nearby Birmingham (and its population) expanded greatly during the Industrial Revolution, Lichfield remained largely unchanged in character.
The first council houses were built in the Dimbles area of the city in the 1930s.[citation needed] The outbreak ofWorld War II brought over 2,000evacuees from industrialised areas. However, due to the lack of heavy industry in the city, Lichfield escaped lightly, although there wereair raids in 1940 and 1941 and three Lichfeldians were killed. Just outside the city,Wellington Bombers flew out of Fradley Aerodrome, which was known asRAF Lichfield. After the war the council built many new houses in the 1960s, including some high-rise flats, while the late 1970s and early 1980s saw the construction of a large housing estate at Boley Park in the south-east of the city. The city's population tripled between 1951 and the late 1980s.[citation needed]
The city has continued expanding to the west. The Darwin Park housing estate has been under development for a number of years and has swelled the city's population by approximately 3,000. Plans were approved for Friarsgate, a new £100 million shopping and leisure complex oppositeLichfield City Station. The police station, bus station, Ford garage and multi-storey car park were to be demolished to make way for 22,000 m2 of retail space and 2,000 m2 of leisure facilities, consisting of a flagship department store, six-screen cinema, hotel, 37 individual shops and 56 flats.[25] These plans have not gone ahead[26] and new plans have been made for a cinema in the abandonedDebenhams building.[27]
Historically theBishop of Lichfield had authority over the city. It was not until 1548, withEdward VI's charter, that Lichfield had any form of secular government. As a reward for the support given to Mary I by the bailiffs and citizens during the Duke of Northumberland's attempt to prevent her accession, the Queen issued a new charter in 1553, confirming the 1548 charter and in addition granting the city its own Sheriff. The same charter made Lichfield a county separate from the rest ofStaffordshire. It remained so until 1888.
The City Council (not to be confused withLichfield District Council, which has authority over a wider area than Lichfield city) has 28 members from the six wards of Boley Park, Chadsmead, Curborough, Leamonsley, St John's, and Stowe, who are elected every four years.[28] After the 2019 parish council elections,[29] theConservatives remained in overall control, with the 28 seats being divided between the Conservatives (16),the Liberal Democrats (8),Labour (3) and Independent (1) who subsequently joined the Labour group. TheRight Worshipful theMayor of Lichfield (currently Councillor Robert Yardley[30]) is the civic head of the council[31] and chairs council meetings. The council also appoints a Leader of Council to be the main person responsible for leadership of the council's political and policy matters. The council's current Leader isCouncillor Mark Warfield. Lichfield is one of only 15 towns and cities in England and Wales which appoints aSheriff.[32]
TheLichfield constituency sent two members to the parliament of 1304 and to a few succeeding parliaments, but the representation did not become regular until 1552; in 1867 it lost one member, and in 1885 its representation was merged into that of the county.[23] The Lichfield constituency was abolished in 1950 and replaced with theLichfield and Tamworth constituency. This constituency lasted until 1983, when it was replaced with theMid Staffordshire constituency.
Based on the resident's location in Lichfield District, there are technically two MPs. The current Member of Parliament for Lichfield, including the whole of the city, is the Labour PoliticianDave Robertson, who has been MP for Lichfield since the2024 general election. Robertson won the seat from ConservativeMichael Fabricant, who had held the seat since 1997, by a majority of 810.[33]
Lichfield covers an area of approximately 5.41 sq mi (14.0 km2) in the south-east of the county of Staffordshire in the West Midlands region of England. It is approximately 27 km (17 mi) north of Birmingham and 200 km (120 mi) north-west of London. The city is located between the high ground ofCannock Chase to the west and the valleys of the RiversTrent andTame to the east. It is underlain by redsandstone, deposited during the arid desert conditions of theTriassic period.Mercia Mudstone underlies the north and north-eastern edges of the city towardsElmhurst and Curborough. The red sandstone underlying the majority of Lichfield is present in many of its ancient buildings, including Lichfield Cathedral and theChurch of St Chad.[36]
The ground within the city slopes down from 116m in the north-west to 86m on the sandstone shelf where Lichfield Cathedral stands. To the south and east of the city centre is a ridge which reaches 103 m atSt Michael on Greenhill. Boley Park lies on top of a ridge with its highest point on Borrowcop Hill at 113m. To the south-east the level drops to 69 m where Tamworth Road crosses the city boundary into Freeford. There is another high ridge south-west of the city where there are two high points, one at Berry Hill Farm at 123 m and the other on Harehurst Hill near the city boundary at Aldershawe where the level reaches 134 m.[37]
The city is built on the two sides of a shallow valley, into which flow two streams from the west, the Trunkfield Brook and the Leamonsley Brook, and out of which the Curborough Brook runs to the north-east, eventually flowing into theRiver Trent. The two streams have been dammed south of the cathedral on Dam Street to formMinster Pool and near St Chad's Road to formStowe Pool.[citation needed]
Panorama from Harehurst Hill 1.5 mi (2.4 km) south west of the cathedral, showing Lichfield's distinctive 5 spires
Lichfield has a number of suburbs including Boley Park, Chadsmead, Christ Church, Darwin Park, The Dimbles, Leomonsley, Nether Stowe, Sandfields, Stowe, Streethay and Trent Valley. A major recent residential development is Darwin Park, to the immediate south-west of the city centre. Designed by the architectural practice BHB in the early 21st century,[38] it provides mixed housing together with a range of community facilities.[39][40] The development is named afterErasmus Darwin, who was born and grew up in Lichfield, and who is commemorated with a sculpture on Cathedral Walk, a footpath which offers a direct traffic-free connection between Darwin Park and Lichfield city centre.[41][42]
At the time of the 2021 census, the population of the City of Lichfield was 34,738. Lichfield is 96.5% white and 66.5% Christian. 51% of the population over 16 were married. 64% were employed and 21% of the people were retired. All of these figures were higher than the national average.[43]
Lichfield's wealth grew along with its importance as an ecclesiastical centre. The original settlement prospered as the place where pilgrims gathered to worship at the shrine of St Chad: this practice continued until theReformation, when the shrine was destroyed.
In the Middle Ages, the main industry in Lichfield was making woollen cloth; there was also a leather industry. Much of the surrounding area was open pasture, and there were many surrounding farms.
In the 18th century, Lichfield became a busy coaching centre. Inns and hostelries grew up to provide accommodation, and industries dependent on the coaching trade such as coach builders, corn and hay merchants, saddlers, and tanneries began to thrive. The Corn Exchange was designed by T. Johnson and Son and completed in 1850.[44]
The invention of the railways saw a decline in coach travel, and with it came the decline in Lichfield's prosperity. By the end of the 19th century,brewing was the principal industry, and in the neighbourhood were large market gardens which provided food for the growing populations of nearby Birmingham and theBlack Country.
Today there are a number of light industrial areas, predominantly in the east of the city, not dominated by any one particular industry. The district is famous for two local manufacturers:Armitage Shanks, makers of baths/bidets and showers, andArthur Price of England, master cutlers and silversmiths. Many residents commute to Birmingham.
TheLichfield Greenhill Bower takes place annually onSpring Bank Holiday. Originating from a celebration that was held after theCourt of Arraye in the 12th century, the festival has evolved into its modern form, but has kept many of its ancient traditions.[45] After a recreation of the Court of Arraye at theGuildhall, a procession of marching bands,morris men and carnival floats makes its way through the city and the Bower Queen is crowned outside the Guildhall. There is a funfair in the city centre, and another fair and jamboree inBeacon Park.[45]
The Lichfield Festival, an international arts festival, has taken place every July for 30 years. The festival is a celebration of classical music, dance, drama, film, jazz, literature, poetry, visual arts and world music. Events take place at many venues around the city but centre onLichfield Cathedral and theGarrick Theatre. Popular events include the medieval market in the Cathedral Close and the fireworks display which closes the festival.[46]
Triennially the LichfieldMysteries, the biggest community theatre event in the country, takes place at the cathedral and in the Market Place. It consists of acycle of 24 medieval-style plays involving over 600 amateur actors.[47] Other weekend summer festivals include the LichfieldFolk Festival[48] and The LichfieldReal Ale, Jazz and Blues Festival.[49]
Lichfield Heritage Weekend, incorporatingDr Johnson's Birthday Celebrations, takes place on the third weekend in September with a variety of civic events including live music and free historical tours of local landmarks.
Beacon Park, in the city centre, hosts a wide range of community events.
There are many parks, gardens and open spaces in the city. The city centre park isBeacon Park, which hosts a range of community events and activities throughout the year. Also in the city centre are two lakes,Minster Pool andStowe Pool. The Garden of Remembrance, a memorial garden laid out in 1920 afterWorld War I, is located on Bird Street. Many other parks are located on the outskirts of the city: these include Brownsfield Park, Darnford Park, Shortbutts Park, Stychbrook Park, Saddlers Wood and Christian Fields.[50]
There are two public sports and leisure facilities in the city. Friary Grange Leisure Centre in the north-west of the city offers racket sports, a swimming pool, and sports hall and fitness gym. King Edward VI Leisure Centre in the south of the city offers racket sports, a sports hall and anartificial turf pitch.
Lichfield Library and Record Office was located on the corner of St John Street and The Friary. The building also included an adult education centre and a small art gallery. The library occupied this building in 1989, when it moved from the Lichfield Free Library and Museum on Bird Street. The library moved into the newly renovated St Mary's Church on Market Square in 2018
The city is served by the Samuel Johnson Community Hospital located on Trent Valley Road. This hospital replaced the now-demolished Victoria Hospital in 2006.
Lichfield Cathedral - The only medieval cathedral in Europe with three spires. The present building was started in 1195, and completed by the building of the Lady Chapel in the 1330s. It replaced a Norman building begun in 1085 which had replaced one, or possibly two, Anglo-Saxon buildings from the 7th century.
Cathedral Close - Surrounding the cathedral, the close contains many buildings of architectural interest.
Erasmus Darwin House - Home to Erasmus Darwin, the house was restored to create a museum which opened to the public in 1999.
The Hub at St Mary's - located inSt Mary's Church in the market square, it is a community hub and event venue which also houses the local library.
Lichfield Guildhall - a historic building in the centre of Lichfield, located in Bore Street, it has been central to the government of the city for over 600 years.
Bishop's Palace - Built in 1687, the palace was the residence of the Bishop of Lichfield until 1954; it is now used by the Cathedral School.
Dr Milley's Hospital - Located on Beacon Street, it dates back to 1504 and was a women's hospital.
Hospital of St John Baptist without the Barrs - A distinctive Tudor building with a row of eight brick chimneys. This was built outside the city walls (barrs) to provide accommodation for travellers arriving after the city gates were closed. It now provides homes for elderly people and has an adjacent Chapel.
Church of St Chad - A 12th-century church, though extensively restored; near the church is a reconstruction of 'St Chad's Well', where St Chad is said to have prayed and baptised people.
St Michael on Greenhill - Overlooking the city, the ancient churchyard is one of the largest in the country at 9 acres (4 ha).
The Market Square - In the centre of the city, the square contains two statues, one of Samuel Johnson overlooking the house in which he was born, and one of his great friend and biographer,James Boswell.
Beacon Park - An 81-acre (33 ha) public park in the centre of the city, used for sporting and recreational activities.
Minster Pool &Stowe Pool - The two lakes occupying 16 acres in the heart of Lichfield: Stowe Pool is designated aSSSI site as it is home to native White-Clawed Crayfish. By Stowe Pool stands Johnson's Willow, a descendant of the original enormous tree which was much admired and visited by Samuel Johnson. In 2021 the fifth incarnation of the tree was installed.[54]
Lichfield Clock Tower - A Grade II listed, 19th-century clock tower, located south of Festival Gardens.
Letocetum - The remains of a Roman staging post and bath house, in the village ofWall, 3.5 km (2.2 mi) south of the city.
Staffordshire Regiment Museum - 2.5 miles (4 km) east of the city inWhittington, the museum covers the regiment's history, activities and members, and includes photographs, uniforms, weapons, medals, artefacts, memorabilia and regimental regalia. Outdoors is a replica trench from World War I, and several armoured fighting vehicles.
National Memorial Arboretum - 4 miles (6 km) north east of the city inAlrewas, the Arboretum is a national site of remembrance and contains many memorials to the armed services.
Sandfields Pumping Station - On Chesterfield Road WS14 0AA, this is a Grade II* listed, 19th-century pumping station.
The bus station is located on Birmingham Road, although as part of the Friarsgate development plans have been approved for it to be moved next to Lichfield City railway station.
Lichfield has college services for theRodbaston campus ofSouth Staffordshire College, run by Diamond East Midlands, and school-only journeys for local high schools. Seasonal bus routes run for Boots and Amazon employees only are usually operated by Diamond East Midlands and National Express West Midlands.
LinkUp provides bus connections for all residents to Lichfield, Burntwood and surrounding villages. The service runs daily except Sunday and is bookable in advance (no fares are taken on board) and is operated by Diamond Bus.
Lichfield is centrally located on theUK road network. Historically, theRoman roads ofWatling Street andRyknild Street crossed 2 mi (3.2 km) south of the city atLetocetum; today, they follow much of the same routes as theA5 andA38. The A5 runs west towardsWales and south-east towardsTamworth. The A38 runs south to Birmingham and north-east toDerby. Running along the western perimeter of the city is theA51 road, which runs north to Chester and south-east to Tamworth.
The nearest motorway junction is T5 of theM6 Toll, located 2 mi (3.2 km) south of the city. Junction 9 of theM42 and junction 4A of theM6 are 12 mi (19 km) and 15 mi (24 km) to the south respectively.
The first section of Lichfield Canal to be rewatered on Tamworth Road
Lichfield Canal was historically part of theWyrley and Essington Canal and ran south of the city from 1797, until it was abandoned in 1955. It covers a distance of 7 mi (11 km) through 30 locks from Ogley Junction on the Birmingham Canal Navigations (BCN) to Huddlesford Junction on theCoventry Canal.[58]
In 2009, a detailed feasibility report was produced by renowned consultantsWS Atkins to restore the canal along much of its original route and make it navigable.
The nearest navigable canal to Lichfield is the Coventry Canal, which runs throughStreethay.
Maple Hayes School: A DfES Approved Special School for dyslexic children.
The Lichfield campus of theUniversity of Staffordshire andSouth Staffordshire College is located on the Friary. This campus facility was opened in 1998 and offers further and higher education courses up to and including master's degrees. A £3 million school of art, design and media, housed in purpose-built accommodation, opened in 2006. This facility received the highest possible grade of 'outstanding provision' in the latestOfsted inspection report.[59]
Some 66.5% of the people in the Lichfield parish area polled as part of the2011 Census described themselves as Christian.[60] Lichfield has held a religious importance since St Chad became the firstBishop of Lichfield and built a monastery in 669 AD. After Chad's death in 672 AD he was buried in anAnglo-Saxon church which later became part ofLichfield Cathedral.
There are fivefaith schools in the city, all of which are primary schools. St Michael's C of E School, Christ Church C of E School and St Chad's C of E (VC) School are all Church of England faith schools. St Joseph's RC School and SS Peter & Paul School are Roman Catholic faith schools.
Historicallyrugby was more popular in the city thanfootball largely due to the fact that it was the main sport atLichfield Grammar School. However, both sports have remained at amateur level.Lichfield Rugby Union Football Club was founded in 1874. As of the 2011–12 season they play in theMidlands 1 West League, which is the 6th level of theEnglish Rugby Union system.[61] The team plays at Cooke Fields, located south east of the city on Tamworth Road, behind the Horse and Jockey public house.
Lichfield City play in the Premier Division of theMidland Football League after promotion in 2012.[62] The 1st team play at Brownsfield Park. LCFC are an FA Charter Community club with teams from under 7s to adults.
AFC Lichfield are an FA Chartered Standard community youth football club and currently have teams playing in the Lichfield & District Recreational League at all levels from under 6 to under 18. AFC Lichfield also boast a football academy offering FA coaching to boys and girls aged 4–8 years.
Lichfield Diamonds LFC is at the forefront of girls' football in Staffordshire, being the first all female club to achieve Charter Standard Status. The team plays at the Collins Hill Sports Ground.
The Wandering Angels, a team from Lichfield in Staffordshire took part in the first known Women's FA Cup Match on 1 November 1970 against Leicester City Supporters Ladies FC.
Lichfield Hockey Club is afield hockey club based at Collins Hill Sports Ground on Eastern Avenue, and competes in theMidlands Hockey League. On 21 March 2015 the men's 1st team won the league with a 3–2 win over Barton, meaning they gained promotion toMen's England Hockey League for the 2015/16 season.[64][65]
Lichfield is served by fourgolf courses, including the local authority 18-hole course atBeacon Park. The others are: Darnford Moors Golf Club, a new facility in the south of the city which provides a 9-hole pay and play facility, and theRobert Rock Academy, adriving range and coaching academy;[66] Lichfield Country Club, based inElmhurst, which boasts an 18-hole par 72 championship course and theMidlands' first American-specification 9 hole par 3 course; and Whittington Heath Golf Club, an 18-hole par 70 course south-east of the city, laid out onheathland and woodland.
Lichfield Archers were formed over 40 years ago and shoot at Christian Fields, where they have 20-yard indoor and 100-yard outdoor ranges. Apart from club competitions, the club also holds Inter-County and Inter-Club shoots and have held the Staffordshire Outdoor Championshipe at Christian Fields.[67]
Samuel Johnson (1709–1784), often referred to asDr Johnson, was an English writer, poet, playwright, essayist, moralist, literary critic, biographer, editor, and lexicographer[78][79]
Following theSecond World War, to try and help prevent another global conflict and to ease relations between, and stop prejudices against nations, the City of Lichfield was twinned with:[108]
^Coates, Richard; Breeze, Andrew (2000).Celtic Voices, English Places: Studies of the Celtic Impact on Place-Names in Britain. Stamford: Tyas.ISBN1900289415..
^Patrick Sims-Williams (1990). "2". In Alfred Bammesberger (ed.).Britain 400–600: Language and History. Heidelberg: Carl Winter Universitätsverlag. p. 260.ISBN3-533-04271-5.
^abSargent, Andrew (2020).Lichfield and the Lands of St Chad. University of Hertfordshire Press. pp. Pages 90, 264.ISBN978-1-912260-24-9.
^Hanks, Patrick; Hodges, Flavia (2002).The Oxford Names Companion. Oxford University Press; p. 1107.ISBN0198605617
^abWatts, Victor, ed. (2004).The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, Based on the Collections of the English Place-Name Society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.ISBN9780521168557., s.v.Lichfield.
^abDelamarre, Xavier (2012).Noms de lieux celtiques de l'europe ancienne (-500/+500): Dictionnaire. Arles, France: Éditions Errance. p. 175.ISBN978-2-87772-483-8.